Last data update: Nov 04, 2024. (Total: 48056 publications since 2009)
Records 1-9 (of 9 Records) |
Query Trace: Philpott D[original query] |
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Barriers and facilitators to HIV service access among Hispanic/Latino gay, bisexual, and other men who have sex with men in metropolitan Atlanta-a qualitative analysis
Hassan R , Saldana CS , Garlow EW , Gutierrez M , Hershow RB , Elimam D , Adame JF , Andía JF , Padilla M , Gonzalez Jimenez N , Freeman D , Johnson EN , Reed K , Holland DP , Orozco H , Pedraza G , Hayes C , Philpott DC , Curran KG , Wortley P , Agnew-Brune C , Gettings JR . J Urban Health 2023 100 (6) 1193-1201 Hispanic/Latino persons are disproportionately impacted by HIV in the US, and HIV diagnoses among Hispanic/Latino men in Georgia have increased over the past decade, particularly in metropolitan Atlanta. In 2022, the Georgia Department of Public Health detected five clusters of rapid HIV transmission centered among Hispanic/Latino gay, bisexual, and other men who have sex with men (HLMSM) in metropolitan Atlanta. We conducted in-depth interviews with 65 service providers and 29 HLMSM to identify barriers and facilitators to HIV service access for HLMSM. Interviews were audio recorded, transcribed, and translated, if needed. Initial data analyses were conducted rapidly in the field to inform public health actions. We then conducted additional analyses including line-by-line coding of the interview transcripts using a thematic analytic approach. We identified four main themes. First, inequity in language access was a predominant barrier. Second, multiple social and structural barriers existed. Third, HLMSM encountered intersectional stigma. Finally, the HLMSM community is characterized by its diversity, and there is not a one-size-fits-all approach to providing appropriate care to this population. The collection of qualitative data during an HIV cluster investigation allowed us to quickly identity barriers experienced by HLMSM when accessing HIV and other medical care, to optimize public health response and action. Well-designed program evaluation and implementation research may help elucidate specific strategies and tools to reduce health disparities, ensure equitable service access for HLMSM, and reduce HIV transmission in this population. |
Low CD4 count or being out of care increases the risk for Mpox hospitalization among people with HIV and Mpox
Philpott DC , Bonacci RA , Weidle PJ , Curran KG , Brooks JT , Khalil G , Feldpausch A , Pavlick J , Wortley P , O'Shea JG . Clin Infect Dis 2023 HIV-associated immunosuppression may increase risk of hospitalization with mpox. Among persons diagnosed with mpox in the state of Georgia, we characterized the association between hospitalization with mpox and HIV status. People with HIV and CD4 < 350 cells/mm3 or who were not engaged in HIV care had increased risk of hospitalization. |
Estimating the incubation period of monkeypox virus during the 2022 multi-national outbreak (preprint)
Charniga K , Masters NB , Slayton RB , Gosdin L , Minhaj FS , Philpott D , Smith D , Gearhart S , Alvarado-Ramy F , Brown C , Waltenburg MA , Hughes CM , Nakazawa Y . medRxiv 2022 23 Monkeypox is a zoonotic disease endemic in Central and West Africa. In May 2022, an outbreak of monkeypox characterized by human-to-human transmission was detected in multiple non-endemic countries. We estimated the incubation period for monkeypox using information from 22 probable (N = 1) and confirmed (N = 21) monkeypox cases in patients reported in the United States through June 6, 2022. We pooled U.S. patient data with the data from 18 confirmed cases in patients reported from the Netherlands through May 31, 2022. The mean incubation period from exposure to first symptom onset was 7.6 days (95% credible interval: 6.2 - 9.7), and the 95th percentile was 17.1 days (95% CrI: 12.7-24.3). These findings align with current CDC recommendations for monitoring close contacts of people with monkeypox for 21 days after their last exposure. Copyright The copyright holder for this preprint is the author/funder, who has granted medRxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. This article is a US Government work. It is not subject to copyright under 17 USC 105 and is also made available for use under a CC0 license. |
Public Health Response to Clusters of Rapid HIV Transmission Among Hispanic or Latino Gay, Bisexual, and Other Men Who Have Sex with Men - Metropolitan Atlanta, Georgia, 2021-2022.
Saldana C , Philpott DC , Mauck DE , Hershow RB , Garlow E , Gettings J , Freeman D , France AM , Johnson EN , Ajmal A , Elimam D , Reed K , Sulka A , Adame JF , Andía JF , Gutierrez M , Padilla M , Jimenez NG , Hayes C , McClung RP , Cantos VD , Holland DP , Scott JY , Oster AM , Curran KG , Hassan R , Wortley P . MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep 2023 72 (10) 261-264 During February 2021-June 2022, the Georgia Department of Public Health (GDPH) detected five clusters of rapid HIV transmission concentrated among Hispanic or Latino (Hispanic) gay, bisexual, and other men who have sex with men (MSM) in metropolitan Atlanta. The clusters were detected through routine analysis of HIV-1 nucleotide sequence data obtained through public health surveillance (1,2). Beginning in spring 2021, GDPH partnered with health districts with jurisdiction in four metropolitan Atlanta counties (Cobb, DeKalb, Fulton, and Gwinnett) and CDC to investigate factors contributing to HIV spread, epidemiologic characteristics, and transmission patterns. Activities included review of surveillance and partner services interview data,(†) medical chart reviews, and qualitative interviews with service providers and Hispanic MSM community members. By June 2022, these clusters included 75 persons, including 56% who identified as Hispanic, 96% who reported male sex at birth, 81% who reported male-to-male sexual contact, and 84% of whom resided in the four metropolitan Atlanta counties. Qualitative interviews identified barriers to accessing HIV prevention and care services, including language barriers, immigration- and deportation-related concerns, and cultural norms regarding sexuality-related stigma. GDPH and the health districts expanded coordination, initiated culturally concordant HIV prevention marketing and educational activities, developed partnerships with organizations serving Hispanic communities to enhance outreach and services, and obtained funding for a bilingual patient navigation program with academic partners to provide staff members to help persons overcome barriers and understand the health care system. HIV molecular cluster detection can identify rapid HIV transmission among sexual networks involving ethnic and sexual minority groups, draw attention to the needs of affected populations, and advance health equity through tailored responses that address those needs. |
Perceived benefits and barriers of a COVID-19 test to stay program in a school district serving Black or African American people with low income, December 2021
Kamitani E , Holman EJ , Philpott D , Parasram VD , Ruth LJ , Onyeuku C , Carter B , Gwynn E , Beck TW , Regan K , Hagler LR , Clark A , Shelley G , Thomas ES . Public Health Rep 2023 333549231155472 OBJECTIVES: Quarantine after exposure to COVID-19 has resulted in substantial loss of in-person learning in schools from prekindergarten through grade 12. Test to Stay (TTS), a strategy that limits the spread of SARS-CoV-2 while prioritizing in-person learning, requires substantial investment in resources. The objective of this study was to assess the perceived benefits, barriers, and facilitators of implementing TTS in an urban school district in the Midwest serving primarily Black or African American people with low income. METHODS: In December 2021, we used a concurrent mixed-methods approach to understand perceived benefits, barriers, and facilitators of implementing TTS by combining quantitative analysis of telephone surveys conducted with parents (n = 124) and a qualitative inquiry involving key informants from the school district and local health department (n = 22). We analyzed quantitative data using descriptive statistics. We used thematic analysis to analyze qualitative data. RESULTS: Quantitative findings showed that parents supported TTS because it was convenient (n = 83, 97%) and effective (n = 82, 95%) in keeping students learning in person (n = 82, 95%) and preventing the spread of COVID-19 (n = 80, 93%). Qualitative interviews with informants found that having a clear protocol and assigning staff to specified tasks allowed for successful TTS implementation. However, insufficient staffing and testing resources, parent mistrust of testing, and lack of communication from schools were perceived barriers. CONCLUSION: The school community strongly supported TTS despite the many implementation challenges faced. This study emphasized the importance of ensuring resources for equitable implementation of COVID-19 prevention strategies and the critical role of communication. |
Epidemiologic and clinical characteristics of Monkeypox cases - United States, May 17-July 22, 2022
Philpott D , Hughes CM , Alroy KA , Kerins JL , Pavlick J , Asbel L , Crawley A , Newman AP , Spencer H , Feldpausch A , Cogswell K , Davis KR , Chen J , Henderson T , Murphy K , Barnes M , Hopkins B , Fill MA , Mangla AT , Perella D , Barnes A , Hughes S , Griffith J , Berns AL , Milroy L , Blake H , Sievers MM , Marzan-Rodriguez M , Tori M , Black SR , Kopping E , Ruberto I , Maxted A , Sharma A , Tarter K , Jones SA , White B , Chatelain R , Russo M , Gillani S , Bornstein E , White SL , Johnson SA , Ortega E , Saathoff-Huber L , Syed A , Wills A , Anderson BJ , Oster AM , Christie A , McQuiston J , McCollum AM , Rao AK , Negrón ME . MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep 2022 71 (32) 1018-1022 Monkeypox, a zoonotic infection caused by an orthopoxvirus, is endemic in parts of Africa. On August 4, 2022, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services declared the U.S. monkeypox outbreak, which began on May 17, to be a public health emergency (1,2). After detection of the first U.S. monkeypox case), CDC and health departments implemented enhanced monkeypox case detection and reporting. Among 2,891 cases reported in the United States through July 22 by 43 states, Puerto Rico, and the District of Columbia (DC), CDC received case report forms for 1,195 (41%) cases by July 27. Among these, 99% of cases were among men; among men with available information, 94% reported male-to-male sexual or close intimate contact during the 3 weeks before symptom onset. Among the 88% of cases with available data, 41% were among non-Hispanic White (White) persons, 28% among Hispanic or Latino (Hispanic) persons, and 26% among non-Hispanic Black or African American (Black) persons. Forty-two percent of persons with monkeypox with available data did not report the typical prodrome as their first symptom, and 46% reported one or more genital lesions during their illness; 41% had HIV infection. Data suggest that widespread community transmission of monkeypox has disproportionately affected gay, bisexual, and other men who have sex with men and racial and ethnic minority groups. Compared with historical reports of monkeypox in areas with endemic disease, currently reported outbreak-associated cases are less likely to have a prodrome and more likely to have genital involvement. CDC and other federal, state, and local agencies have implemented response efforts to expand testing, treatment, and vaccination. Public health efforts should prioritize gay, bisexual, and other men who have sex with men, who are currently disproportionately affected, for prevention and testing, while addressing equity, minimizing stigma, and maintaining vigilance for transmission in other populations. Clinicians should test patients with rash consistent with monkeypox,(†) regardless of whether the rash is disseminated or was preceded by prodrome. Likewise, although most cases to date have occurred among gay, bisexual, and other men who have sex with men, any patient with rash consistent with monkeypox should be considered for testing. CDC is continually evaluating new evidence and tailoring response strategies as information on changing case demographics, clinical characteristics, transmission, and vaccine effectiveness become available.(§). |
Use of mid-upper arm circumference to screen for thinness among sub-Saharan African male detainees
Philpott DC , Belchior-Bellino V , Ververs M . Public Health Nutr 2021 24 (15) 1-24 OBJECTIVE: Body mass index (BMI) is a time-intensive measurement to assess nutritional status. Mid-upper arm circumference (MUAC) has been studied as a proxy for BMI in adults, but there is no consensus on its optimal use. DESIGN: We calculated sensitivity, specificity, and area under receiver operating characteristic curve (AUROCC) of MUAC for BMI <18.5, <17, and <16 kg/m2. We designed a system using two MUAC cutoffs, with a healthy (non-thin) "green" group, a "yellow" group requiring BMI measurement, and a "red" group who could proceed directly to treatment for thinness. SETTING: We retrospectively analyzed monitoring data collected by the International Committee of the Red Cross in places of detention. PARTICIPANTS: 11,917 male detainees in eight African countries. RESULTS: MUAC had excellent discriminatory ability with AUROCC: 0.87, 0.90, and 0.92 for BMI<18.5, BMI<17, and BMI<16 kg/m2, respectively. An upper cutoff of MUAC 25.5 cm to exclude healthy detainees would result in 64% fewer detainees requiring BMI screening and had sensitivity 77% (95%CI 69.4,84.7) and specificity 79.6 (95%CI: 72.6,86.5) for BMI<18.5 kg/m2. A lower cutoff of MUAC<21.0 cm had sensitivity 25.4% (95%CI: 11.7,39.1) and specificity 99.0% (97.9,100.0) for BMI<16 kg/m2. An additional 50kg weight requirement improved specificity to 99.6% (95%CI: 99.0,100.0%) with similar sensitivity. CONCLUSIONS: A MUAC cutoff of 25.5 cm, above which detainees are classified as healthy and below receive further screening would result in significant time savings. A cutoff of <21.0 cm and weight <50 kg can identify some detainees with BMI <16 kg/m2 who require immediate treatment. |
Iron catalysis of lipid peroxidation in ferroptosis: Regulated enzymatic or random free radical reaction
Stoyanovsky DA , Tyurina YY , Shrivastava I , Bahar I , Tyurin VA , Protchenko O , Jadhav S , Bolevich SB , Kozlov AV , Vladimirov YA , Shvedova AA , Philpott CC , Bayir H , Kagan VE . Free Radic Biol Med 2018 133 153-161 Duality of iron as an essential cofactor of many enzymatic metabolic processes and as a catalyst of poorly controlled redox-cycling reactions defines its possible biological beneficial and hazardous role in the body. In this review, we discuss these two "faces" of iron in a newly conceptualized program of regulated cell death, ferroptosis. Ferroptosis is a genetically programmed iron-dependent form of regulated cell death driven by enhanced lipid peroxidation and insufficient capacity of thiol-dependent mechanisms (glutathione peroxidase 4, GPX4) to eliminate hydroperoxy-lipids. We present arguments favoring the enzymatic mechanisms of ferroptotically engaged non-heme iron of 15-lipoxygenases (15-LOX) in complexes with phosphatidylethanolamine binding protein 1 (PEBP1) as a catalyst of highly selective and specific oxidation reactions of arachidonoyl- (AA) and adrenoyl-phosphatidylethanolamines (PE). We discuss possible role of iron chaperons as control mechanisms for guided iron delivery directly to their "protein clients" thus limiting non-enzymatic redox-cycling reactions. We also consider opportunities of loosely-bound iron to contribute to the production of pro-ferroptotic lipid oxidation products. Finally, we propose a two-stage iron-dependent mechanism for iron in ferroptosis by combining its catalytic role in the 15-LOX-driven production of 15-hydroperoxy-AA-PE (HOO-AA-PE) as well as possible involvement of loosely-bound iron in oxidative cleavage of HOO-AA-PE to oxidatively truncated electrophiles capable of attacking nucleophilic targets in yet to be identified proteins leading to cell demise. |
The challenge of defining standards of prevention in HIV prevention trials
Philpott S , Heise L , McGrory E , Paxton L , Hankins C . J Med Ethics 2010 37 (4) 244-8 As new HIV prevention tools are developed, researchers face a number of ethical and logistic questions about how and when to include novel HIV prevention strategies and tools in the standard prevention package of ongoing and future HIV prevention trials. Current Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS)/World Health Organization (WHO) guidance recommends that participants in prevention trials receive 'access to all state of the art HIV risk reduction methods', and that decisions about adding new tools to the prevention package be made in consultation with 'all relevant stakeholders'. The guidance, however, leaves open questions of both process and implementation. In March 2009, the Global Campaign for Microbicides, UNAIDS and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention convened a consultation to develop practical answers to these questions. Fifty-nine diverse participants, including researchers, ethicists, advocates and policymakers, worked to develop consensus criteria on when to include new HIV prevention tools in future trials. Participants developed a set of questions to guide decision-making, including: whether the method has been recommended by international bodies or adopted at a national level; the size of the effect and weight of the evidence; relevance to the trial population; whether the tool has been approved or introduced in the trial country; whether adding the tool might lead to trial futility; outstanding safety issues and status of the trial. Further work is needed to develop, implement and evaluate approaches to facilitate meaningful stakeholder participation in this deliberative process. |
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